Morteza "Mori" Thanksgiving Inflatables Decorations Hosseini,Also. a Daytona Beach builder, and John Rood, a Jacksonvil busi execut and former ambassador to the Bahamas.
Fla. -- Gov. Charli Crist ha reappoint on member and name five new member to the Board of Governors,TAMPA. which overse Florida' 11 state universities.
Crist announc the appoint Thursdai befor a board meet at the Univers of South Florida.
H reappoint Jacksonvil lawyer Ava Parker to a two-year term.
a Tampa real estat develop and investor; Dean Colson,New member who will serv seven year includ Richard A. Beard III. a Coral Gabl lawyer and special advis to Crist on higher education, and Patricia Frost, a retir teacher and princip from Miami Beach.
2010年1月28日星期四
Check 'no' to a GOP litmus test
Steel recogn that what' Abominable Snowman Inflatable good for the donkei is also good for the elephantTh reason we hope Steele' advic is heed is becaus a more divers Republican Parti -- like a more divers Democrat Parti -- promot pragmat and consensu in govern at the state and feder levels. Both the Democrat Parti and the countri benefit when parti leader recruit candid in 2006 who didn't pass a liber litmu test. Whatev hi flaws..
We'r not in the habit of tell Republican -- or Democrat -- how to run their campaigns. But we'r make an except todai to prais Republican Nation Committe Chairman Michael S. Steele' opposit to a 10-point litmu test for hi party' candidates. Such a test would not just be bad for the party; it would undermin good governance.
thei rang from support for lower tax and the Defens of Marriag Act to opposit to cap-and-trad legisl and amnesti for illeg immigrantsSteel ha critic the resolut conserv want to bring befor the Republican Nation Committee' meet in Honolulu that would deni parti endors and financi aid to ani candid who didn't affirm at least eight of 10 principles. A sort of conserv greatest hits..
but in some race for Congress or the governor' mansion,Most Republican candid probabl would score at least 80%. a "gentleman' C" might be better for the party' chanc of winning. Steel recogn that reality, and the fact that prospect candid might not appreci be put to the test.
" Steel said in an interview with the New York Times. "Would you join an organ that stood at the doorstep with a clipboard and check off to make sure you fit everi criteria thei had?" "Let me ask you.
Republican sometim must appeal to independ and Democrat to be elected. If Brown had been subject to a loyalti test even if he pass ,It would be in the party' interest to call off thi polit Inquisition. As Sen.-elect Scott Brown R-Mass. demonstrated. hi Democrat oppon would have found it easier to portrai him as a right-winger.
We'r not in the habit of tell Republican -- or Democrat -- how to run their campaigns. But we'r make an except todai to prais Republican Nation Committe Chairman Michael S. Steele' opposit to a 10-point litmu test for hi party' candidates. Such a test would not just be bad for the party; it would undermin good governance.
thei rang from support for lower tax and the Defens of Marriag Act to opposit to cap-and-trad legisl and amnesti for illeg immigrantsSteel ha critic the resolut conserv want to bring befor the Republican Nation Committee' meet in Honolulu that would deni parti endors and financi aid to ani candid who didn't affirm at least eight of 10 principles. A sort of conserv greatest hits..
but in some race for Congress or the governor' mansion,Most Republican candid probabl would score at least 80%. a "gentleman' C" might be better for the party' chanc of winning. Steel recogn that reality, and the fact that prospect candid might not appreci be put to the test.
" Steel said in an interview with the New York Times. "Would you join an organ that stood at the doorstep with a clipboard and check off to make sure you fit everi criteria thei had?" "Let me ask you.
Republican sometim must appeal to independ and Democrat to be elected. If Brown had been subject to a loyalti test even if he pass ,It would be in the party' interest to call off thi polit Inquisition. As Sen.-elect Scott Brown R-Mass. demonstrated. hi Democrat oppon would have found it easier to portrai him as a right-winger.
2010年1月24日星期日
Guild Awards Snub ‘Avatar’
Mad Men for televis drama, Inflatable Camping Air Tents 60 Minut for nonfict television, The Colbert Report for live entertainment, Grei Garden for long-form television, Up for an anim featur film, and The Cove for featur documentary.
Jam Cameron s 3-D scienc fiction epic Avatar wa name the best dramat film at the Golden Globes.
66,Th three-wai split among core Hollywood institut all of which last year line up behind Slumdog Millionaire, th eventu Oscar winner point toward a mad scrambl in the next few week by contend for the Academi Award for best picture.
66,Th Oscar nomin will be announc on Feb. 2 at the Beverli Hill headquart of the Academi of Motion Pictur Art and Sciences, which present the Oscars. The award will be hand out March 7.
000 vote member of the academi on Saturday. So the split between the screen actor and the produc and their diverg from voter of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association,Nomin ballot were due from about 6. which give the Golden Globe had no direct influenc on the Academi Award nominations. But thei point to an extrem diverg of opinion in an award season that had alreadi been distort by the academi s surpris decis to doubl the number of Oscar nomine to 10 from 5.
66,That wa done in a bid to get some of the year s more popular film repres in a ceremoni that late ha showcas independent-styl film like No Countri for Old Men, There Will Be Blood and Milk.
The guild award ar close watch becaus mani of those who vote in contest run by the Hollywood union ar also vote member of the academy.
an Iraq war drama that had alreadi clean up sever critic award but still need valid from Hollywood s inner circle. The produc in 2008 gave their top prize to No Countri for Old Men,Th produc guild award wa a big win for The Hurt Locker. set up that pictur as the eventu Oscar winner, though their prize for the previou three year went to movi Littl Miss Sunshine, Brokeback Mountain, and The Aviator that did not win the Oscar.
becaus actor make up the largest singl group within the academy,Th actor guild award is usual a strong indic of Oscar prospects. with a branch that number 1,205 members, or about 21 percent of the voters.
about a guerrilla group that take bloodi reveng on murder Nazis,Th prize for Inglouriou Basterd virtual guarante that the film. will be among the Oscar nomine a week from now. The actor at the same time gave their top award for a male movi lead to Jeff Bridges for hi portray of a broken-down countri singer in Crazi Heart, and their prize for best femal movi lead to Sandra Bullock, for plai a tough-mind Southern white woman who help a homeless black youth to becom a footbal star in The Blind Side.
66,By scatter honor far and wide the guild contribut to an anyth goe spirit that ha taken over the season. At Soni Pictur insid have been specul that their unconvent sci-fi film District 9 might get a best pictur nomination, while Disnei ha been look for its Up to get a nod, though anim film have usual been overlooked.
which ha taken in more than $550 million at the domest box office. If Mr. Cameron s film had won the produc award,But the guild award also creat an air of uncertainti around Avatar. it might have been a shoo-in for the top Oscar, despit have lost out with the actors. After all, the cast spent much of the movi in a semi-anim state with the help of computer performance-captur systems, so thei were never expect to wow the actor group.
a much smaller film direct byKathryn Bigelow, who is Mr. Cameron s ex-wife. And both will be compet in a wide-open contest with ani pictur that can slip into that twice-as-wid field of Oscar nominees.
Jam Cameron s 3-D scienc fiction epic Avatar wa name the best dramat film at the Golden Globes.
66,Th three-wai split among core Hollywood institut all of which last year line up behind Slumdog Millionaire, th eventu Oscar winner point toward a mad scrambl in the next few week by contend for the Academi Award for best picture.
66,Th Oscar nomin will be announc on Feb. 2 at the Beverli Hill headquart of the Academi of Motion Pictur Art and Sciences, which present the Oscars. The award will be hand out March 7.
000 vote member of the academi on Saturday. So the split between the screen actor and the produc and their diverg from voter of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association,Nomin ballot were due from about 6. which give the Golden Globe had no direct influenc on the Academi Award nominations. But thei point to an extrem diverg of opinion in an award season that had alreadi been distort by the academi s surpris decis to doubl the number of Oscar nomine to 10 from 5.
66,That wa done in a bid to get some of the year s more popular film repres in a ceremoni that late ha showcas independent-styl film like No Countri for Old Men, There Will Be Blood and Milk.
The guild award ar close watch becaus mani of those who vote in contest run by the Hollywood union ar also vote member of the academy.
an Iraq war drama that had alreadi clean up sever critic award but still need valid from Hollywood s inner circle. The produc in 2008 gave their top prize to No Countri for Old Men,Th produc guild award wa a big win for The Hurt Locker. set up that pictur as the eventu Oscar winner, though their prize for the previou three year went to movi Littl Miss Sunshine, Brokeback Mountain, and The Aviator that did not win the Oscar.
becaus actor make up the largest singl group within the academy,Th actor guild award is usual a strong indic of Oscar prospects. with a branch that number 1,205 members, or about 21 percent of the voters.
about a guerrilla group that take bloodi reveng on murder Nazis,Th prize for Inglouriou Basterd virtual guarante that the film. will be among the Oscar nomine a week from now. The actor at the same time gave their top award for a male movi lead to Jeff Bridges for hi portray of a broken-down countri singer in Crazi Heart, and their prize for best femal movi lead to Sandra Bullock, for plai a tough-mind Southern white woman who help a homeless black youth to becom a footbal star in The Blind Side.
66,By scatter honor far and wide the guild contribut to an anyth goe spirit that ha taken over the season. At Soni Pictur insid have been specul that their unconvent sci-fi film District 9 might get a best pictur nomination, while Disnei ha been look for its Up to get a nod, though anim film have usual been overlooked.
which ha taken in more than $550 million at the domest box office. If Mr. Cameron s film had won the produc award,But the guild award also creat an air of uncertainti around Avatar. it might have been a shoo-in for the top Oscar, despit have lost out with the actors. After all, the cast spent much of the movi in a semi-anim state with the help of computer performance-captur systems, so thei were never expect to wow the actor group.
a much smaller film direct byKathryn Bigelow, who is Mr. Cameron s ex-wife. And both will be compet in a wide-open contest with ani pictur that can slip into that twice-as-wid field of Oscar nominees.
What the stars were saying at the SAG Awards
The star-stud Hope for Haiti Commercial Kids Inflatable Jumpers Now telethon thi past Fridai brought in million of viewer and dollar for crucial Ha relief efforts. In fact, the initiative, which is still accept donat via the web, text, phone, or mail, ha rais $58 million to date, set a record for the most fund rais dure a telethon.
2010年1月20日星期三
The essence of love - never regret
" I sai finally. Then,MiBiggest Inflatable Slide friend' look make me realiz that tear have form in my eyes. "You'll never regret it. squeez my friend' hand, I offer a prayer for her and me and all of the mere mortal women who stumbl their wai into thi holiest of callings.
"sh says,Time is run out for my friend. While we ar sit at lunch she casual mention she and her husband ar think of start a family. "We'r take a survey. half-joking. "Do you think I should have a baby?"
" I say,"It will chang your life. carefulli keep my tone neutral. "I know,"sh says, "no more sleep in on weekends, no more spontan holidays..."
try to decid what to tell her. I want her to know what she will never learn in childbirth classes. I want to tell her that the physic wound of child bear will heal,But that' not what I mean at all. I look at my friend. but becom a mother will leav her with an emot wound so raw that she will be vulner forever.
everi hous China Pvc Inflatable Toy fire will haunt her. That when she see pictur of starv children,I consid warn her that she will never again read a newspap without thinking: "What if that had been MY child?" That everi plane crash. she will wonder if anyth could be wors than watch your child die. I look at her carefulli manicur nail and stylish suit and think that no matter how sophist she is, becom a mother will reduc her to the primit level of a bear protect her cub.
she will be profession derail by motherhood. She might arrang for child care,I feel I should warn her that no matter how mani year she ha invest in her career. but on dai she will be go into an import busi meeting, and she will think her baby' sweet smell. She will have to us everi ounc of disciplin to keep from run home, just to make sure her child is all right.
she will second-guess herself constantli as a mother. I want my friend to know that everi decis will no longer be routine. That a five-year-old boy' desir to go to the men' room rather than the women' at a restaur will becom a major dilemma. The issu of independ and gender ident will be weigh against the prospect that a child molest mai be lurk in the lavatory. Howev decis she mai be at the office.
I want to assur her that eventu she will shed the ad weight of pregnancy,Look at my attract friend. but she will never feel the same about herself. That her own life, now so important, will be of less valu to her onc she ha a child. She would give it up in a moment to save her offspring, but will also begin to hope for more year not to accomplish her own dream but to watch her children accomplish theirs.
I want to describ to my friend the exhilar of see your child learn to hit a ball. I want to captur for her the belli laugh of a babi who is touch the soft fur of a dog for the first time. I want her to tast the joi that is so real it hurts.
"sh says,Time is run out for my friend. While we ar sit at lunch she casual mention she and her husband ar think of start a family. "We'r take a survey. half-joking. "Do you think I should have a baby?"
" I say,"It will chang your life. carefulli keep my tone neutral. "I know,"sh says, "no more sleep in on weekends, no more spontan holidays..."
try to decid what to tell her. I want her to know what she will never learn in childbirth classes. I want to tell her that the physic wound of child bear will heal,But that' not what I mean at all. I look at my friend. but becom a mother will leav her with an emot wound so raw that she will be vulner forever.
everi hous China Pvc Inflatable Toy fire will haunt her. That when she see pictur of starv children,I consid warn her that she will never again read a newspap without thinking: "What if that had been MY child?" That everi plane crash. she will wonder if anyth could be wors than watch your child die. I look at her carefulli manicur nail and stylish suit and think that no matter how sophist she is, becom a mother will reduc her to the primit level of a bear protect her cub.
she will be profession derail by motherhood. She might arrang for child care,I feel I should warn her that no matter how mani year she ha invest in her career. but on dai she will be go into an import busi meeting, and she will think her baby' sweet smell. She will have to us everi ounc of disciplin to keep from run home, just to make sure her child is all right.
she will second-guess herself constantli as a mother. I want my friend to know that everi decis will no longer be routine. That a five-year-old boy' desir to go to the men' room rather than the women' at a restaur will becom a major dilemma. The issu of independ and gender ident will be weigh against the prospect that a child molest mai be lurk in the lavatory. Howev decis she mai be at the office.
I want to assur her that eventu she will shed the ad weight of pregnancy,Look at my attract friend. but she will never feel the same about herself. That her own life, now so important, will be of less valu to her onc she ha a child. She would give it up in a moment to save her offspring, but will also begin to hope for more year not to accomplish her own dream but to watch her children accomplish theirs.
I want to describ to my friend the exhilar of see your child learn to hit a ball. I want to captur for her the belli laugh of a babi who is touch the soft fur of a dog for the first time. I want her to tast the joi that is so real it hurts.
The Joy of Living
like happiness,We can Unicorn Inflatable never get it by work for it directly. It comes. to those who ar aim at someth higher. It is a byproduct of great, simpl living. The joi of live come from what we put into living, not from what we seek to get from it.
trust them,Joi in live come from have fine emotions. give them the freedom of a bird in the open. Joi in live can never be assum as a pose, or put on from the outsid as a mask. Peopl who have thi joi don not need to talk about it; thei radiat it. Thei just live out their joi and let it splash it sunlight and glow into other live as natur as bird sings.
trust them,Joi in live come from have fine emotions. give them the freedom of a bird in the open. Joi in live can never be assum as a pose, or put on from the outsid as a mask. Peopl who have thi joi don not need to talk about it; thei radiat it. Thei just live out their joi and let it splash it sunlight and glow into other live as natur as bird sings.
2010年1月11日星期一
Electricity
The modern Inflatable Dinosaur Ship age is an age of electricity. People are so used to electric lights, radio, televisions, and telephones that it is hard to imagine what life would be like without them. When there is a power failure, people grope about in flickering candlelight, cars hesitate in the streets because there are no traffic lights to guide them, and food spoils in silent refrigerators.
Yet, people began to understand how electricity works only a little more than two centuries ago. Nature has apparently been experimenting in this field for millions of years. Scientists are discovering more and more that the living world may hold many interesting secrets of electricity that could benefit humanity.
All living cells send out tiny pulses of electricity. As the heart beats, it sends out pulses of record; they form an electrocardiogram, which a doctor can study to determine how well the heart is working. The brain, too, sends out brain waves of electricity, which can be recorded in an electroencephalogram. The electric currents generated by most living cells are extremely small -- often so small that sensitive instruments are needed to record them. But in some animals, certain muscle cells have become so specialized as electrical generators that they do not work as muscle cells at all. When large numbers of these cells are linked together, the effects can be astonishing.
The electric eel is an amazing storage battery. It can send a jolt of as much as eight hundred volts of electricity through the water in which it lives. (An electric house current is only one hundred twenty volts.) As many as four-fifths of all the cells in the electric eel's body are specialized for generating electricity, and the strength of the shock it can deliver corresponds roughly to the length of its body.
Yet, people began to understand how electricity works only a little more than two centuries ago. Nature has apparently been experimenting in this field for millions of years. Scientists are discovering more and more that the living world may hold many interesting secrets of electricity that could benefit humanity.
All living cells send out tiny pulses of electricity. As the heart beats, it sends out pulses of record; they form an electrocardiogram, which a doctor can study to determine how well the heart is working. The brain, too, sends out brain waves of electricity, which can be recorded in an electroencephalogram. The electric currents generated by most living cells are extremely small -- often so small that sensitive instruments are needed to record them. But in some animals, certain muscle cells have become so specialized as electrical generators that they do not work as muscle cells at all. When large numbers of these cells are linked together, the effects can be astonishing.
The electric eel is an amazing storage battery. It can send a jolt of as much as eight hundred volts of electricity through the water in which it lives. (An electric house current is only one hundred twenty volts.) As many as four-fifths of all the cells in the electric eel's body are specialized for generating electricity, and the strength of the shock it can deliver corresponds roughly to the length of its body.
The Definition of "Price"
Prices determine Christmas Decorations how resources are to be used. They are also the means by which products and services that are in limited supply are rationed among buyers. The price system of the United States is a complex network composed of the prices of all the products bought and sold in the economy as well as those of a myriad of services, including labor, professional, transportation, and public-utility services. The interrelationships of all these prices make up the "system" of prices. The price of any particular product or service is linked to a broad, complicated system of prices in which everything seems to depend more or less upon everything else. If one were to ask a group of randomly selected individuals to define "price", many would reply that price is an amount of money paid by the buyer to the seller of a product or service or, in other words, that price is the money value of a product or service as agreed upon in a market transaction. This definition is, of course, valid as far as it goes. For a complete understanding of a price in any particular transaction, much more than the amount of money involved must be known. Both the buyer and the seller should be familiar with not only the money amount, but with the amount and quality of the product or service to be exchanged, the time and place at which the exchange will take Sumo Wrestling Suits place and payment will be made, the form of money to be used, the credit terms and discounts that apply to the transaction, guarantees on the product or service, delivery terms, return privileges, and other factors. In other words, both buyer and seller should be fully aware of all the factors that comprise the total "package" being exchanged for the asked-for amount of money in order that they may evaluate a given price.
2010年1月8日星期五
Women in Colonial North America
The status Inflatable Snowmen of women in colonial North America has been well studied and described and can be briefly summarized. Throughout the colonial period there was a marked shortage of women, which varied with the regions and was always greatest in the frontier areas. This favorable ratio enhanced women's status and position and allowed them to pursue different careers. The Puritans, the religious sect that dominated the early british colonies in North America, regarded idleness as a sin, and believed that life in an underdeveloped country made it absolutely necessary that each member of the community perform an economic function. Thus work for women, married or single, was not only approved, it was regarded as a civic duty. Puritan town councils expected widows and unattached women to be self supporting and for a long time provided needy spinsters with parcels of land. There was no social sanction against married women working; on the contrary, wives were expected to help their husbands in their trade and won social approval for doing extra work in or out of the home. Needy children, girls as well as boys, were indentured or apprenticed and were expected to work for their keep. The vast majority of women worked within their homes, where their labor produced most articles needed for the family. The entire colonial production of cloth and clothing and partially that of shoes was in the hands of women. In addition to these occupations, women were found in many different kinds of employment. They were butchers, silversmiths, gunsmiths and upholsterers. They ran mills, plantations, tanyards, shipyards, and every kind of shop, tavern, and boardinghouse. They were gatekeepers, jail keepers, sextons, journalists, printers, apothecaries, midwives, nurses, and teachers.
Women in Colonial North America
Carmen Lomas Inflatable Kids Toys Garza's eloquent etchings, lithographs, and gouache paintings depict primal images of the rural environment and communal cultural experience of Mexican decended people in the United States. In an introspective and personal language, she describes the customs, traditions, a nd ways of life of her Texan Mexican heritage.By 1972, Lomas Garza had evolved her distinctive monitos, paintings of stylized figures in culturally specific social environments.
Oral tradition is a mainstay of Chicano culture. In both urban and rural communities, a rich and varied repertoire of ballads, tales, and poetic forms is preserved in memory and passed from generation to generation. Lomas Garza's monitos function as an oral tradition in visual form. Her unique art of storytelling employs iconographic elements to create a concentrated narration. Visual episodes within an unfolding epic tale of cultural regeneration, the monitos keep alive the customs and daily practices that give meaning and coherence to Chicano identity. Their basic aim is to delight and instruct. For those outside Chicano culture, the precise and minutely detail ed monitos provide a glimpse into the rich and vibrant lifestyl e of the largest Spanish speaking cultural group within the United States society. Although her art has an innocent earnestness and folkloric affinity, Lomas Garza's expression is neither naive nor instinctive. The artist is highly trained academically, but has chosen to remain independent of dominant Inflatable Dinosaur Ship artistic trends in order to work toward a private aesthetic response to social concerns. While her work does not posit an overt political statement, it originates from a desire to respo nd to the contemporary situation of Mexican Americans by expressing positive images of their culture.
Oral tradition is a mainstay of Chicano culture. In both urban and rural communities, a rich and varied repertoire of ballads, tales, and poetic forms is preserved in memory and passed from generation to generation. Lomas Garza's monitos function as an oral tradition in visual form. Her unique art of storytelling employs iconographic elements to create a concentrated narration. Visual episodes within an unfolding epic tale of cultural regeneration, the monitos keep alive the customs and daily practices that give meaning and coherence to Chicano identity. Their basic aim is to delight and instruct. For those outside Chicano culture, the precise and minutely detail ed monitos provide a glimpse into the rich and vibrant lifestyl e of the largest Spanish speaking cultural group within the United States society. Although her art has an innocent earnestness and folkloric affinity, Lomas Garza's expression is neither naive nor instinctive. The artist is highly trained academically, but has chosen to remain independent of dominant Inflatable Dinosaur Ship artistic trends in order to work toward a private aesthetic response to social concerns. While her work does not posit an overt political statement, it originates from a desire to respo nd to the contemporary situation of Mexican Americans by expressing positive images of their culture.
2010年1月5日星期二
Preparing A Presentation
CHRISTINA: Liz, do you have a minute?
LIZ: Yes, of course. What is it?
CHRISTINA: I need you to help me set up for my presentation Thursday morning.
LIZ: Okay, what should I do?
CHRISTINA: Well, it isn't at this office. It's over at the Dayton Street office.
Have you been there before?
LIZ: Yes, of course. I have to go there every Tuesday.
CHRISTINA: Good. So you will have no trouble finding it.
LIZ: What's the presentation about?
CHRISTINA: I Inflatable Pool Slideswill talk about developing sales through our website.
All the branch heads will be there, and most of the staff.
LIZ: Will you need anything special for the presentation?
CHRISTINA: Well, I need the display monitor.
But Tom can set that up for me on Wednesday.
I will need you to help with everything else.
LIZ: I suppose you need the whiteboard set up.
CHRISTINA: I need the whiteboard, and pens.
I don't know if they have pens over there. So you have to bring pens. And an eraser.
LIZ: Alright. That's no problem. I will bring pens. Anything else?
CHRISTINA: Well, I'm afraid it will be troublesome, Liz.
You know what that office is like.
You will have to move some of the desks around to make enough space.
There will be at least twenty people.
LIZ: So you need me to set up fold-out chairs too.
I can do that no problem.
I will call Mary over there and ask her to make sure they have enough chairs.
CHRISTINA: Thank you. I know they have that storage room there.
There are chairs in the storage room.
LIZ: But I don't know if there are twenty chairs. I might have to bring some from here.
LIZ: Yes, of course. What is it?
CHRISTINA: I need you to help me set up for my presentation Thursday morning.
LIZ: Okay, what should I do?
CHRISTINA: Well, it isn't at this office. It's over at the Dayton Street office.
Have you been there before?
LIZ: Yes, of course. I have to go there every Tuesday.
CHRISTINA: Good. So you will have no trouble finding it.
LIZ: What's the presentation about?
CHRISTINA: I Inflatable Pool Slideswill talk about developing sales through our website.
All the branch heads will be there, and most of the staff.
LIZ: Will you need anything special for the presentation?
CHRISTINA: Well, I need the display monitor.
But Tom can set that up for me on Wednesday.
I will need you to help with everything else.
LIZ: I suppose you need the whiteboard set up.
CHRISTINA: I need the whiteboard, and pens.
I don't know if they have pens over there. So you have to bring pens. And an eraser.
LIZ: Alright. That's no problem. I will bring pens. Anything else?
CHRISTINA: Well, I'm afraid it will be troublesome, Liz.
You know what that office is like.
You will have to move some of the desks around to make enough space.
There will be at least twenty people.
LIZ: So you need me to set up fold-out chairs too.
I can do that no problem.
I will call Mary over there and ask her to make sure they have enough chairs.
CHRISTINA: Thank you. I know they have that storage room there.
There are chairs in the storage room.
LIZ: But I don't know if there are twenty chairs. I might have to bring some from here.
Job Interview
ALEX: I can Sumo Suit see by your resume here that you studied business administration.
MORGAN: That's right.
ALEX: So I wonder why you want to work for a newspaper.
MORGAN: I did reporting for the university newspaper at my school.
And I've always been very interested in journalism.
ALEX: But journalism--it's a very different profession from administration.
You know a lot about administration.
Why don't you choose to work for a company looking to train managers?
MORGAN: I studied administration, yes, but I am more attracted to writing articles.
I want to use my knowledge of business to write financial news.
ALEX: A new reporter must expect to work many hours.
MORGAN: I know that the profession requires dedication.
ALEX: You should expect to work more than fifty hours a week.
And there is a lot of pressure in this job.
You have to get stories in by the deadline.
You have to be very independent. You have to know how to arrange things by yourself.
MORGAN: I know that beginning reporters work many hours.
I am very willing to take on the challenge.
ALEX: May I ask how well you know the city?
MORGAN: I grew up here.
ALEX: But you went to college in Maine.
So you haven't lived here for almost five years, yes?
MORGAN: Yes, that's true. But I grew up on the north side of town.
And I know this city very well. I have no trouble getting where I need to go.
ALEX: That's good. Because if you're hired, we will be sending you everywhere.
The job is in the city news department.
MORGAN: Yes, I'm aware of that.
ALEX: Judging Large Inflatable Toy by the stories you gave us, I'd say your writing is very good.
Are there any questions you would like to ask me?
MORGAN: No, not at the moment.
ALEX: Alright, then. We will probably be giving you a call in ten days or so.
I have to interview several more people.
MORGAN: Thank you, Mr. Jones.
MORGAN: That's right.
ALEX: So I wonder why you want to work for a newspaper.
MORGAN: I did reporting for the university newspaper at my school.
And I've always been very interested in journalism.
ALEX: But journalism--it's a very different profession from administration.
You know a lot about administration.
Why don't you choose to work for a company looking to train managers?
MORGAN: I studied administration, yes, but I am more attracted to writing articles.
I want to use my knowledge of business to write financial news.
ALEX: A new reporter must expect to work many hours.
MORGAN: I know that the profession requires dedication.
ALEX: You should expect to work more than fifty hours a week.
And there is a lot of pressure in this job.
You have to get stories in by the deadline.
You have to be very independent. You have to know how to arrange things by yourself.
MORGAN: I know that beginning reporters work many hours.
I am very willing to take on the challenge.
ALEX: May I ask how well you know the city?
MORGAN: I grew up here.
ALEX: But you went to college in Maine.
So you haven't lived here for almost five years, yes?
MORGAN: Yes, that's true. But I grew up on the north side of town.
And I know this city very well. I have no trouble getting where I need to go.
ALEX: That's good. Because if you're hired, we will be sending you everywhere.
The job is in the city news department.
MORGAN: Yes, I'm aware of that.
ALEX: Judging Large Inflatable Toy by the stories you gave us, I'd say your writing is very good.
Are there any questions you would like to ask me?
MORGAN: No, not at the moment.
ALEX: Alright, then. We will probably be giving you a call in ten days or so.
I have to interview several more people.
MORGAN: Thank you, Mr. Jones.
2010年1月3日星期日
Arctic Ocean Depths Teeming with Life
The remotest depths of the Arctic ocean are surprisingly full of life, including previously unknown species of jellyfish and worms, a scientific team which just finished exploring the area said on Friday.
The scientists, led by the University of Alaska, used robot submarines and sonar to probe an isolated 12,470-foot (3,800-meter) basin off Canada's Arctic coast where they fear species could be at risk from global warming.
"We were surprised by the abundance and the diversity of life in this environment. Even at a depth of 3,000 meters we found animals on the sea floor, we found sea cucumbers ... and all kinds of jellyfish and crustaceans," said Rolf Gradinger of the University of Alaska, the chief scientist on the voyage.
"Some of the species that we saw are completely new to science, they have not been described in any area of the earth so far," he told reporters on a conference call. The species are a jellyfish and three kinds of benthic bristle worms.
The team also found unexpectedly high numbers of cod as well as the first squid, octopus and flea-like crustaceans ever seen in an icy environment.
Scientists Christmas Inflatable from the United States, Canada, Russia and China spent 30 days on the U.S. icebreaker Healy as part of a $1 billion, 10-year global Census of Marine Life funded by governments, companies and private donors.
The Healy returned on Tuesday with thousands of specimens from the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas and the Canada Basin, a vast bowl walled by steep ridges and covered with ice.
The team said the data would help measure the impact of climate change and, should polar caps continue receding, the damage done by increased energy exploitation, fishing and shipping.
"This is a benchmark and we hope that in the next 10, 20 or 30 years these kinds of studies will be repeated to see whether any kinds of changes have occurred in the composition and the abundance of animal life," said Gradinger.
The scientists, led by the University of Alaska, used robot submarines and sonar to probe an isolated 12,470-foot (3,800-meter) basin off Canada's Arctic coast where they fear species could be at risk from global warming.
"We were surprised by the abundance and the diversity of life in this environment. Even at a depth of 3,000 meters we found animals on the sea floor, we found sea cucumbers ... and all kinds of jellyfish and crustaceans," said Rolf Gradinger of the University of Alaska, the chief scientist on the voyage.
"Some of the species that we saw are completely new to science, they have not been described in any area of the earth so far," he told reporters on a conference call. The species are a jellyfish and three kinds of benthic bristle worms.
The team also found unexpectedly high numbers of cod as well as the first squid, octopus and flea-like crustaceans ever seen in an icy environment.
Scientists Christmas Inflatable from the United States, Canada, Russia and China spent 30 days on the U.S. icebreaker Healy as part of a $1 billion, 10-year global Census of Marine Life funded by governments, companies and private donors.
The Healy returned on Tuesday with thousands of specimens from the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas and the Canada Basin, a vast bowl walled by steep ridges and covered with ice.
The team said the data would help measure the impact of climate change and, should polar caps continue receding, the damage done by increased energy exploitation, fishing and shipping.
"This is a benchmark and we hope that in the next 10, 20 or 30 years these kinds of studies will be repeated to see whether any kinds of changes have occurred in the composition and the abundance of animal life," said Gradinger.
Teacher Ants Show Students the Way to Food
Ants have a myriad of complex social behaviors despite possessing only teeny brains. Now new research suggests that teaching should be added to the list of ant accomplishments.
Nigel Franks and Tom Richardson of the University of Bristol in England studied so-called tandem running in Temnothorax albipennis ants, during which two ants run a course between nest and food with various stops and starts en route. The researchers found that the lead ant who knows the way to the food slows down as the follower familiarizes itself with the route and will not proceed until the follower taps it on the back. The two also maintain a variable but matching speed and distance over time.
"This behavior is beautifully simple," Richardson says. "If one experimentally removes the follower and taps the leader with a hair at a rate of two times per second or more, the leader will continue."
Biologists have a definition of a teacher in the world of animals: any individual who sacrifices some potential gain in order to educate a naïve counterpart. In a report published today in Nature Franks and Richardson argue that true teaching also requires feedback between the teacher and the student. The ant duos qualify on both counts. "The teacher provides information or guidance to the pupil at a rate suited to the pupil's abilities and the pupil signals to the teacher when parts of the 'lesson' have been assimilated and that the lesson may continue," Franks notes. "True teaching always involves feedback in both directions."
In the Inflatable Slide case of the ants, the teachers sacrificed their own speed, as evidenced by the observation that they reached the food source four times more quickly on their own than when they had a student in tow. But the students found food more than a minute faster with the help of teaching and then often themselves became teachers for other ants. Sometimes, however, knowledge of a food source needs to be communicated faster than one-on-one training can accomplish. In those situations, large ant groups often broadcast such information through pheromone trails or other means. But tandem running proves that teaching may develop even in organisms that lack large brains, providing help for pupils with the tiniest of intellects. --David Biello
Nigel Franks and Tom Richardson of the University of Bristol in England studied so-called tandem running in Temnothorax albipennis ants, during which two ants run a course between nest and food with various stops and starts en route. The researchers found that the lead ant who knows the way to the food slows down as the follower familiarizes itself with the route and will not proceed until the follower taps it on the back. The two also maintain a variable but matching speed and distance over time.
"This behavior is beautifully simple," Richardson says. "If one experimentally removes the follower and taps the leader with a hair at a rate of two times per second or more, the leader will continue."
Biologists have a definition of a teacher in the world of animals: any individual who sacrifices some potential gain in order to educate a naïve counterpart. In a report published today in Nature Franks and Richardson argue that true teaching also requires feedback between the teacher and the student. The ant duos qualify on both counts. "The teacher provides information or guidance to the pupil at a rate suited to the pupil's abilities and the pupil signals to the teacher when parts of the 'lesson' have been assimilated and that the lesson may continue," Franks notes. "True teaching always involves feedback in both directions."
In the Inflatable Slide case of the ants, the teachers sacrificed their own speed, as evidenced by the observation that they reached the food source four times more quickly on their own than when they had a student in tow. But the students found food more than a minute faster with the help of teaching and then often themselves became teachers for other ants. Sometimes, however, knowledge of a food source needs to be communicated faster than one-on-one training can accomplish. In those situations, large ant groups often broadcast such information through pheromone trails or other means. But tandem running proves that teaching may develop even in organisms that lack large brains, providing help for pupils with the tiniest of intellects. --David Biello
Chocoholism Reaches Near-Epidemic Proportions
As the Valentine's Day is coming, industry gears up to spew out roses, cards and confectionery. Chocoholism reached almost epidemic proportions in 2002 as the world chomped its way through chocolate bars, sweets and pralines worth a staggering $42.2 billion.
Research Inflatable Tent from business information group Datamonitor put the Irish and British at the top of the chocolate-munchers league.
While Europe as a whole spent .2 billion on chocolate last year, Britons made almost one in three chocolate purchases, while in Belgium, considered by many to be the home of the chocolate-maker's art, Belgian put away only 8.4 kilos per head.
But tastes vary widely.
The French prefer simplicity and purity of taste, without additional flavors and with little sugar, while Italian tastes are geared toward the more indulgent and sophisticated end of the market.
The Japanese prefer milk chocolate, the Thais go for white chocolate and in Hong Kong and Singapore, dark varieties come out as favorites.
Research Inflatable Tent from business information group Datamonitor put the Irish and British at the top of the chocolate-munchers league.
While Europe as a whole spent .2 billion on chocolate last year, Britons made almost one in three chocolate purchases, while in Belgium, considered by many to be the home of the chocolate-maker's art, Belgian put away only 8.4 kilos per head.
But tastes vary widely.
The French prefer simplicity and purity of taste, without additional flavors and with little sugar, while Italian tastes are geared toward the more indulgent and sophisticated end of the market.
The Japanese prefer milk chocolate, the Thais go for white chocolate and in Hong Kong and Singapore, dark varieties come out as favorites.
Hello Kitty going strong at 30
She struts the Inflatable Castle catwalk at New York fashion shows and she's best friends with Mariah Carey and Cameron Diaz.
She makes 0 million a year, but prefers relaxing at home with friends and baking cakes in her spare time. Hello Kitty, one of Japan's most famous character brands, may be heading for her 30th birthday, but the silky feline is showing no signs of her age.
The cute white cat with the pink bow on her ear accounts for half of Sanrio's annual revenues of billion, and is emblazoned on over 20,000 goods - everything from toasters and handbags to adult toys - in some 40 countries. Hello Kitty even has her own theme park.
"From cutlery and coffee cups to the toilet seat cover, almost everything in my one-room apartment was Hello Kitty, even the curtains," says Tomoko Taniai, a 25-year old Tokyoite and ex-Kitty lover. "But after a while, on TV and in magazines it was just Kitty, Kitty, Kitty. I couldn't keep up anymore."
So how did a mouthless cat with no story line become an international brand sensation?
"I just like her because she is like the Mona Lisa, you never know if she is smiling or if she is sad," says a fan on Kitty Realm, an Internet message board where Hello Kitty aficionados meet to purr about her lovable quirks. Unlike other popular characters such as Mickey Mouse or Winnie the Pooh, whose images remain strictly controlled by their owners, Kitty's designers have been given largely free rein by Sanrio.
She makes 0 million a year, but prefers relaxing at home with friends and baking cakes in her spare time. Hello Kitty, one of Japan's most famous character brands, may be heading for her 30th birthday, but the silky feline is showing no signs of her age.
The cute white cat with the pink bow on her ear accounts for half of Sanrio's annual revenues of billion, and is emblazoned on over 20,000 goods - everything from toasters and handbags to adult toys - in some 40 countries. Hello Kitty even has her own theme park.
"From cutlery and coffee cups to the toilet seat cover, almost everything in my one-room apartment was Hello Kitty, even the curtains," says Tomoko Taniai, a 25-year old Tokyoite and ex-Kitty lover. "But after a while, on TV and in magazines it was just Kitty, Kitty, Kitty. I couldn't keep up anymore."
So how did a mouthless cat with no story line become an international brand sensation?
"I just like her because she is like the Mona Lisa, you never know if she is smiling or if she is sad," says a fan on Kitty Realm, an Internet message board where Hello Kitty aficionados meet to purr about her lovable quirks. Unlike other popular characters such as Mickey Mouse or Winnie the Pooh, whose images remain strictly controlled by their owners, Kitty's designers have been given largely free rein by Sanrio.
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